- John Grisham
- Skipping Christmas
- Skipping_Christmas_split_018.html
Skipping Christmas
Seventeen
He waited as long as he could, though
he had not a second to spare. Darkness would hit fast at
five-thirty, and in the frenzy of the moment Luther had tucked away
somewhere the crazy notion of hanging ole Frosty under the cover of
darkness. It wouldn’t work, and he knew it, but rational thought
was hard to grasp and hold.
He spent a few moments planning the
project. An attack from the rear of the house was mandatory-no way
would he allow Walt Scheel or Vic Frohmeyer or anybody else to see
him in action.
Luther wrestled Frosty out of the
basement without injuring either one of them, but he was cursing
vigorously by the time they made it to the patio. He hauled the
ladder from the storage shed in the backyard. So far he had not
been seen, or at least he didn’t think so.
The roof was slightly wet with a patch
of ice or two. And it was much colder up there. With a quarter-inch
nylon rope tied around his waist, Luther crawled upward, catlike
and terrified, over the asphalt shingles until he reached the
summit. He peeked over the crown of the roof and peered below-the
Scheels were directly in front of him, way down there.
He looped the rope around the chimney,
then inched back down, backward, until he hit a patch of ice and
slid for two feet. Catching himself, he paused and allowed his
heart to start working again. He looked down in terror. If by some
tragedy he fell, he’d free-fall for a very brief flight, then land
among the metal patio furniture sitting on hard brick. Death would
not be instant, no sir. He’d suffer, and if he didn’t die he’d have
a broken neck or maybe brain damage.
How utterly ridiculous. A
Fifty-four-year-old man playing games like this.
The most horrifying trick of all was
to remount the ladder from above, which he managed to do by digging
his fingernails into the shingles while dangling one foot at a time
over the gutter. Back on the ground, he took a deep breath and
congratulated himself for surviving the first trip to the top and
back.
There were four parts to Frosty-a
wide, round base, then a snowball, then the trunk with one arm
waving and one hand on hip, then the head with his smiling face,
corncob pipe, and black top hat. Luther grumbled as he put the
damned thing together, snapping one plastic section into another.
He screwed the lightbulb into the midsection, plugged in the
eighty-foot extension cord, hooked the nylon rope around Frosty’s
waist, and maneuvered him into position for the ride
up.
It was a quarter to five. His daughter
and her brand-new fiancé would land in an hour and fifteen minutes.
The drive to the airport took twenty minutes, plus more for
parking, shuttling, walking, pushing, shoving.
Luther wanted to give up and start
drinking.
But he pulled the rope tight around
the chimney, and Frosty started up. Luther climbed with him, up the
ladder, worked him over the gutter and onto the shingles. Luther
would pull, Frosty would move a little. He was no more than forty
pounds of hard plastic but soon felt much heavier. Slowly, they
made their way up, side by side, Luther on all fours, Frosty
inching along on his back.
Just a hint of darkness, but no real
relief from the skies. Once the little team reached the crown,
Luther would be exposed. He’d be forced to stand while he grappled
with his snowman and attached him to the front of the chimney, and
once in place, illuminated with the two-hundred-watt, old Frosty
would join his forty-one companions and all of Hemlock would know
that Luther had caved. So he paused for a moment, just below the
summit, and tried to tell himself that he didn’t care what his
neighbors thought or said. He clutched the rope that held Frosty,
rested on his back and looked at the clouds above him, and realized
he was sweating and freezing. They would laugh, and snicker, and
tell Luther’s skipping Christmas story for years to come, and he’d
be the butt of the jokes, but what did it really
matter?
Blair would be happy. Enrique would
see a real American Christmas. Nora would hopefully be
placated.
Then he thought of the Island Princess
casting off tomorrow from Miami, minus two passengers, headed for
the beaches and the islands Luther had been lusting
for.
He felt like throwing up.
Walt Scheel had been in the kitchen,
where Bev was finishing a pie, and, out of habit now, he walked to
his front window to observe the Krank house. Nothing, at first,
then he froze. Peeking over the roof, next to the chimney, was
Luther, then slowly Walt saw Frosty’s black hat, then his face.
“Bev!” he yelled.
Luther dragged himself up, looked
around quickly as if he were a burglar, braced himself on the
chimney, then began tugging on Frosty.
“You must be kidding,” Bev said,
wiping her hands on a dish towel. Walt was laughing too hard to say
anything. He grabbed the phone to call Frohmeyer and
Becker.
When Frosty was in full view, Luther
carefully swung him around to the front of the chimney, to the spot
where he wanted him to stand. His plan was to somehow hold him
there for a second, while he wrapped a two-inch-wide canvas band
around his rather large midsection and secured it firmly around the
chimney. Just like last year. It had worked fine then.
Vic Frohmeyer ran to his basement,
where his children were watching a Christmas movie. “Mr. Krank’s
putting up his Frosty. You guys go watch, but stay on the
sidewalk.” The basement emptied.
There was a patch of ice on the front
side of the roof, just inches from the chimney and virtually
invisible to Luther. With Frosty in place but not attached, and
while Luther was struggling to remove the nylon rope and pull tight
the electrical cord and secure the canvas band around the chimney,
and just as he was to make perhaps the most dangerous move of the
entire operation, he heard voices below. And when he turned to see
who was watching he inadvertently stepped on the patch of ice just
below the crown, and everything fell at once.
Frosty tipped over and was gone,
careening dawn the front of the roof with nothing to hold him
back-no ropes, cords, bands, nothing. Luther was right behind him,
but, fortunately, Luther had managed to entangle himself with
everything. Sliding headfirst down the steep roof, and yelling loud
enough for Walt and Bev to hear indoors, Luther sped like an
avalanche toward certain death.
Later, he would recall, to himself of
course, that he clearly remembered the fall. Evidently, there was
more ice on the front of the roof than on the rear, and once he
found it he felt like a hockey puck. He well remembered flying off
the roof, headfirst, with the concrete driveway awaiting him. And
he remembered hearing but not seeing Frosty crash somewhere nearby.
Then the sharp pain as his fall was stopped-pain around the ankles
as the rope and extension cord abruptly ran out of slack, jerking
poor Luther like a bullwhip, but no doubt saving his
life.
Watching Luther shoot down the roof on
his stomach, seemingly in pursuit of his bouncing Frosty, was more
than Walt Scheel could stand. He ached with laughter until he bent
at the waist. Bev watched in horror.
“Shut up, Walt!” she yelled, then, “Do
something!” as Luther was hanging and spinning well above the
concrete, his feet not far from the gutter.
Luther swung and spun helplessly above
his driveway. After a few turns the cord and rope were tightly
braided together, and the spinning stopped. He felt sick and closed
his eyes for a second. How do you vomit when you’re upside
down?
Wall punched 911. He reported that a
man had been injured and might even be dying on Hemlock, so send
the rescue people immediately. Then he ran out of his house and
across the street where the Frohmeyer children were gathering under
Luther. Vic Frohmeyer was running from two houses down, and the
entire Becker clan from next door was spilling out of their
house.
“Poor Frosty,” Luther heard one of the
children say. Poor Frosty, my ass, he wanted say.
The nylon rope was cutting into the
flesh around his ankles. He was afraid to move because the rope
seemed to give just a little. He was still eight feet above the
ground, and a fall would be disastrous. Inverted, Luther tried to
breathe and collect his wits. He heard Frohmeyer’s big mouth. Would
somebody please shoot me?
“Luther, you okay?” asked
Frohmeyer.
“Swell, Vic, thanks, and you?” Luther
began rotating again, slightly, turning very slowly in the wind.
Soon, he pivoted back toward the street, and came face to face with
his neighbors, the last people he wanted to see.
“Get a ladder,” someone
said.
“Is that an electrical cord around his
feet?” asked someone else.
“Where is the rope attached?” asked
another. All the voices were familiar, but Luther couldn’t
distinguish them.
“I called nine-one-one,” he heard Walt
Scheel say.
“Thanks, Walt,” Luther said loudly, in
the direction of the crowd. But he was revolving back toward the
house.
“I think Frosty’s dead,” one teenager
mumbled to another.
Hanging there, waiting for death,
waiting for the rope to slip then give completely and send him
crashing down, Luther hated Christmas with a renewed passion. Look
what Christmas was doing to him.
All because of Christmas.
And he hated his neighbors too, all of
them, young and old. They were gathering in his driveway by the
dozens now, he could hear them coming, and as he rotated slowly he
could glimpse them running down the street to see this
sight.
The cord and the rope popped somewhere
above him, then gave, and Luther fell another six inches before he
was jerked to another stop. The crowd gasped; no doubt, some of
them wanted to cheer.
Frohmeyer was barking orders as if he
handled these situations every day. Two ladders arrived and one was
placed on each side of Lather. Ned Becker yelled from the back
patio that he’d found what was holding the electrical cord and the
nylon rope, and, in his very experienced opinion, it wouldn’t hold
much longer.
“Did you plug in the extension cord?”
Frohmeyer asked.
“No,” answered Luther.
“We’re gonna get you down,
okay?”
“Yes, please.”
Frohmeyer was climbing one ladder, Ned
Becker the other. Luther was aware that Swade Kerr was down there,
as were Ralph Brixley and John Galdy, and some of the older boys on
the street.
My life is in their hands, Luther said
to himself, and closed his eyes. He weighed one seventy-four, down
eleven for the cruise, and he was quite concerned with how,
exactly, they planned to untangle him, then lower him to the
ground. His rescuers were middle-aged men who, if they broke a
sweat, did so on the golf course. Certainly not power lifting.
Swade Kerr was a frail vegetarian who could barely pick up his
newspaper, and right then he was under Luther hoping to help lower
him to the ground.
“What’s the plan here, Vic?” Luther
asked. It was difficult to talk with his feet straight above him.
Gravity was pulling all the blood to his head, and it was
pounding.
Vic hesitated. They really didn’t have
a plan.
What Luther couldn’t see was that a
group of men was standing directly under him, to break any
fall.
What Luther could hear, though, were
two things. First, someone said, “There’s Nora!”
Then he heard sirens.